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51.The Syracusians, also having intelligence of this, were encouraged unto the pressing of the Athenians much the more, for that they confessed themselves already too weak for them, both by sea and land;for else they would never have sought to have run away.Besides, they would not have them sit down in any other part of Sicily, and become the harder to be warred on;but had rather thereright, and in a place most for their own advantage, compel them to fight by sea.
[2]
To which end they manned their galleys;and after they had rested as long as was sufficient, when they saw their time, the first day they assaulted the Athenians' camp.And some small number of men of arms and horsemen of the Athenians sallied out against them by certain gates;and the Syracusians intercepting some of the men of arms, beat them back into the camp.But the entrance being strait, there were seventy of the horsemen lost, and men of arms some, but not many.

The English works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury. Thucydides. Thomas Hobbes. translator. London. Bohn. 1843.

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